Movies And Tv

Somewhere along the line, we turned against Robin Williams. The Tourette'slike riffing, the schmaltzy roles, the clown nose—it was all too much. But did we miss something else The raw talent and dirty mind that originally drew us to him Is it time we forgave him for Patch Adams

Steve Carell. Stephen Colbert. Louis C.K. Charlie Kaufman. Robert Smigel. Some of comedy's greatest minds got one of their biggest breaks on the short-lived but much-loved "The Dana Carvey Show." Fifteen years later, in this exclusive oral history, the players recount the brief but fertile life of a truly unusual show

He's the original lord of lowbrow, the king of the pratfall, the last surviving link to the bedrock of American comedy—vaudeville, burlesque, slapstick. Sure, he's ancient, but he's juggling half a dozen new projects and still found time to sit down with Amy Wallace for an eleven-hour interview. Call it the Jerry Lewis Marathon that covered, well, just about everything that's ever been funny

If you believe more or less every other working comedian, Louis C.K. is the funniest comic alive. If you pay close attention to sitcoms, his show is unlike anything you've ever seen. And if you're divorced, or middle-aged, or afraid to talk to women, or overwhelmed by parenthood, or otherwise quietly desperate...he is laughing with you and at you

Nirvana. "All That." Harrison Ford. Double-breasted suits. They're all back from the '90s, and as prevalent as ever. But why? And how did these once-dead remnants of a bygone era find their way back into culture?

The new Ryan Gosling-Steve Carell comedy features a classic trope: The makeover scene. Only this time, the designer duds are high-end and stylish, and on a man. We talked to Dayna Pink, the costume designer behind the style transformation

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